Cheat Sheet

Writing Children’s Books For Dummies Cheat Sheet

As you explore writing children’s books, you enter a different world, one filled with book formats — from board books to young adult novels — and a whole different set of rules to follow and restrictions to heed for each. If you want to become a successful children’s book author, you need to know how to edit yourself and how to promote your book.

Tips for Editing Your Children’s Book

At some point after you have a solid draft of the children’s book you’re writing, you must begin the editing process. Here’s a quick overview of the salient points to keep in mind.

If a sentence doesn’t contribute to plot or character development, delete it.

Make sure your characters don’t all sound the same when they speak.

If you have a page or more of continuous dialogue, chances are it needs tightening.

When changing place or time, or starting a new scene or chapter, provide brief transitions to keep your story moving smoothly.

Make sure to keep the pace moving from action to action, scene to scene, chapter to chapter.

If you find yourself using a lot of punctuation (!!!), CAPITAL LETTERS, italics, or bold, chances are your words aren’t working hard enough for you.

When you can find one word to replace two or more words, do it.

Be careful with changing tenses midstream. If your story is told in the past tense, stick with it throughout. If present tense, then stick with that. Be consistent.

Watch excessive use of adjectives, adverbs, and long descriptive passages.

After you choose a point of view for a character, stick to it.

If your character hasn’t changed at the end of your story, chances are he isn’t yet fully fleshed out.

If your character talks to himself or does a lot of wondering aloud, he needs a friend to talk to.

If you’re bored with a character, your reader will be, too.

If you can’t tell your story in three well-crafted sentences: the first one covering the beginning, the second one alluding to the climax (the middle), and the last one hinting at the ending — you may not have a complete story yet.

If you find yourself overwriting because you’re having trouble expressing exactly what you mean, sit back and say it aloud to yourself, and then try again.

Tips for Writing Books for Younger Children

The rules for writing books for younger children (ages 2–8) are different from the rules for writing books for middle graders or young adults. Keep the following 12 commandments in mind. (As with most commandments, you may be able to dance around one or two, but you’d better have a good reason.)

It’s okay to be different from others, but it’s not easy.

Bad guys never win.

The good guy must come out on top in the end.

Extremes rule (the world is black or white, not both — most children ages 10 and under can be quite literal).

All characters should be drawn with both good points and weaknesses. No one is just one or the other — even the good and the bad guy.

It’s fine for something to be scary, but it can never touch a little kid’s body.

Turning things upside down is funny — as long as those things make sense in the first place right side up.

Magic can occur as a logical reaction to an action.

Regular children can perform extraordinary feats.

Regular children can go on implausible missions sanctioned (or not) by adults in charge.

What Not to Do when Writing Children’s Books

Just as writing children’s books has a unique set of rules to follow (you know that the good guy or gal always wins), there are some things you should never do — never! Don’t even consider doing any of the following in a book for children:

Write books that preach or lecture.

Talk down to children as if they’re small, idiotic adults.

Write books that have no real story (nor a plot with beginning, middle, end).

Use art that is totally inappropriate for the story or vice versa.

Pack picture books with lots of text.

Pack nonfiction books with too much text and too few visuals.

Create characters who are boring or unnecessary to the development of the story.

Create main characters who have a problem they don’t solve themselves or who don’t change throughout the course of the story.

How to Promote Your Children’s Book

After you’ve written a children’s book, you have to sell it — you didn’t spend all that time and effort just to entertain yourself, did you? Try to accomplish one of the following tasks each week to help your labor of love blossom to life in the marketplace:

Add new content weekly to your website or blog to keep it fresh.

Explore live readings in bookstores, schools, or libraries.

Submit your book for an award or prize—or ask the publisher to do so.

Consider creating a trailer for your book and an interview with yourself to post on YouTube.

Use Facebook, Twitter, and other social media to keep fans updated on professional news related to your book or your writing (or illustrating).

Age Levels for Children’s Books

If you’re writing a children’s book, it pays to be familiar with how publishers classify them. Publishers generally assign age groups for readers of various formats as set out in the following list:

Board books: Newborn to age 3

Picture books: Ages 3–8

Coloring and activity (C&A) books: Ages 3–8

Novelty books: Ages 3 and up, depending on content

Early, leveled readers: Ages 5–9

First chapter books: Ages 6–9 or 7–10

Middle-grade books: Ages 8–12

Young adult (YA) novels: Ages 12 and up or 14 and up

It’s okay to veer off a year or so in either direction when assigning a target audience age range to your work.

Dummies Insider

Sign up for insider news on books, authors, discounts and more content created just for you.